ASIS&T官员和董事选举:获胜者是....

{"title":"ASIS&T官员和董事选举:获胜者是....","authors":"","doi":"10.1002/bul2.2016.1720420603","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Summer balloting is complete for the annual process of selecting new leaders for the ASIS&amp;T Board of Directors. And the winners, who will take their seats at the conclusion of the upcoming Annual Meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, are <b>Lisa Given</b>, president-elect; <b>June Abbas</b>, treasurer; and as directors-at-large, <b>Heather O'Brien</b> and <b>Dania Bilal</b>.</p><p><b>Lisa Given</b>, professor of information studies and a research fellow of the Research Institute for Professional Practice, Learning and Education at Charles Sturt University in Australia, based her presidential campaign on her interest in deepening and strengthen engagement with members across borders, broadening the membership base across disciplines and in practice, fostering research capacity building and research leadership and developing a structured knowledge management plan for sharing materials within and across ASIS&amp;T units.</p><p>As president-elect, Given will spend the upcoming administrative year working with <b>Lynn Silipigni Connaway</b> of OCLC Research who will ascend to the presidency at the upcoming Annual Meeting.</p><p><b>June Abbas</b>, professor in the School of Library and Information Studies (SLIS) at the University of Oklahoma, Norman campus, looks forward to her term as treasurer during which she will work to sustain the sound financial health of ASIS&amp;T. The step into the treasurer's seat comes immediately upon completion of a term as director-at-large.</p><p>As a member of the Board of Directors, <b>Heather O'Brien</b>, assistant professor at the School of Library, Archival and Information Studies at the University of British Columbia, says she will support the ASIS&amp;T strategic plan and its mission to provide focus, opportunity and support to information professionals and organizations around the world. And <b>Dania Bilal</b>, professor and interim director at the School of Information Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, wants to enhance the association's global perspective through establishing partnerships with professional associations in the Middle East, especially in countries without an ASIS&amp;T presence.</p><p>As the new directors join the ASIS&amp;T Board of Directors, the following people will transition off as their terms are complete: past president <b>Sandra Hirsh</b>, San Jose State University; treasurer <b>Vicki L. Gregory</b>, University of South Florida; director <b>Lauren D. Harrison</b>, Roche TCRC, Inc. As noted above, <b>June Abbas</b> is completing her term as director and taking her seat as newly elected treasurer.</p><p>The long-awaited 2016 ASIS&amp;T Annual Meeting, the first to be held outside of North America, gets underway in just a few short weeks (depending, of course, on when you are reading this article). From October 14–18, Copenhagen, Denmark, becomes home base for the premier, peer-reviewed international conference of information scientists, practitioners and academics.</p><p><b>Creating Knowledge, Enhancing Lives Through Information and Technology</b> is the theme for this year's gathering of the best and the brightest in the fields of information science and technology. Two plenary speakers will address the theme from different perspectives but with similar enthusiasm for the invaluable contributions our field is making to the world at-large.</p><p>Greg Welch, Florida Hospital Endowed Chair in Healthcare Simulation at the University of Central Florida (UCF), holds appointments in the College of Nursing, the computer science department and the Institute for Simulation and Training. He is also co-director of both the UCF Synthetic Reality Laboratory and the interactive systems and user experience research cluster at UCF. He will speak to the ASIS&amp;T gathering on <i>Bridging the Telepresence Valley</i>.</p><p>Markus Bundschus, head of scientific and business information systems at Roche Diagnostics, brings to the ASIS&amp;T Annual Meeting the insights of an insider in the field of biotechnology. Markus works on building bridges between industry and research and has been applying information and technology to create knowledge that contributes to the development of diagnostic tools.</p><p>In addition to these two plenary sessions, attendees will choose from among dozens of stimulating panel and paper sessions presenting cutting-edge research, applications, approaches and agendas that will continue to drive the field in the years ahead.</p><p>If you haven't yet secured your travel arrangements, do so now so you won't miss out on this historic ASIS&amp;T Annual Meeting.</p><p>Peter Suber and other chroniclers of the open-access movement have noted that the open, online dissemination of scholarly and research material is reliant upon digital reproduction. Indeed, prior to our present age, Suber notes that all forms of non-rivalrous objects, such as knowledge, were tied to rivalrous modes of communication, such as paper. But is the digital age so different from the age of mechanical reproduction identified by Walter Benjamin early in the 20<sup>th</sup> century? Why should new technological mutations drive the ways in which humanities scholars disseminate their work? And is there a danger in letting technological fetishism act as determiners of humanities scholarship?</p><p>In this upcoming SIG/AH webinar, professor Martin Paul Eve will address these matters, which are formative elements of the terrain on which scholarship in the 21<sup>st</sup> century will emerge. <i>Technology and Publishing: The Work of Scholarship in the Age of its Digital Reproducibility</i>, featuring Martin Paul Eve from the Open Library of Humanities/Birkbeck, University of London, will be September 21, 2016, at 11:00 a.m.-12:15pm EDT. Access details will be available on the ASIST webinars site at www.asist.org/events/webinars/</p><p>Martin is the author of three books: <i>Pynchon and Philosophy: Wittgenstein, Foucault and Adorno</i> (Palgrave, 2014); <i>Open Access and the Humanities: Contexts, Controversies and the Future</i> (Cambridge University Press, 2014); and <i>Password: A Cultural History</i> (Bloomsbury, forthcoming 2016) and many journal articles. A strong advocate for open access to scholarly material, Martin has given evidence to the UK House of Commons Select Committee Inquiry into Open Access; served on the Jisc OAPEN-UK Advisory Board, the Jisc National Monograph Strategy Group and the Jisc Scholarly Communications Advisory Board; been a member of the HEFCE Open Access Monographs Expert Reference Group; and is a member of the SCONUL Strategy Group on Academic Content and Communications. Martin is also a qualified computer programmer (Microsoft Professional in C# and the .NET Framework) and is the author of the digital publishing tools meTypeset and CaSSius.</p><p><b>Diane Kelly</b>, longtime ASIS&amp;T member and an internationally known information sciences scholar, is the new director of the University of Tennessee School of Information Sciences (SIS). She begins on August 8. Most recently, Diane was at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she was a professor in the School of Information and Library Science. Her research and teaching interests focus on interactive information search and retrieval, information search behavior and research methods.</p><p>“Diane Kelly, one of the world's leading experts with respect to user evaluation of information retrieval systems, is an outstanding scholar/teacher, and we are excited to have her join us as the new director of our School of Information Sciences,” said Mike Wirth, dean of the College of Communication and Information. “Her world-wide connections and extensive grasp of the evolving and expanding fields encompassed by information sciences will provide SIS with the innovative leadership required to expand its interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary teaching and research mission and to confront the challenges and opportunities associated with the world's high-paced and fast growing knowledge economy.”</p><p>Among her many honors and awards, Diane was recognized by ASIS&amp;T in 2014 with the prestigious Research Award. She also received the 2009 ASIS&amp;T/Thomson Reuters Outstanding Information Science Teacher Award.</p><p>Doctoral students in the writing stage or preparing for the defense of their dissertations are urged to showcase their research to a much wider audience in the new ASIS&amp;T Doctoral Student Showcase. Eligible students are those doctoral students who have completed their coursework, qualifying examinations (or equivalent) and defended their proposals or are in the process of analyzing/writing or ready to defend their dissertations. Submissions are short videos similar to elevator speeches in which the dissertation research, related to the broadly defined information field, is presented.</p><p>The producers of the best 20 submissions will win free one-year ASIS&amp;T memberships or renewals. All vetted submissions will be featured on the ASIS&amp;T website.</p><p>The deadline for video submission has been extended to September 1, 2016.</p><p>This initiative is co-sponsored by the ASIS&amp;T Membership Committee, ASIS&amp;T Education and Professional Advancement Committee and the ASIS&amp;T Outreach and Engagement Task Force.</p><p>For more information or if you have any questions, please contact Iris Xie at hiris&lt;at&gt;uwm.edu</p>","PeriodicalId":100205,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin of the Association for Information Science and Technology","volume":"42 6","pages":"5-8"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-08-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1002/bul2.2016.1720420603","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"ASIS&T Election of Officers and Directors: And the Winners Are….\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/bul2.2016.1720420603\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Summer balloting is complete for the annual process of selecting new leaders for the ASIS&amp;T Board of Directors. And the winners, who will take their seats at the conclusion of the upcoming Annual Meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, are <b>Lisa Given</b>, president-elect; <b>June Abbas</b>, treasurer; and as directors-at-large, <b>Heather O'Brien</b> and <b>Dania Bilal</b>.</p><p><b>Lisa Given</b>, professor of information studies and a research fellow of the Research Institute for Professional Practice, Learning and Education at Charles Sturt University in Australia, based her presidential campaign on her interest in deepening and strengthen engagement with members across borders, broadening the membership base across disciplines and in practice, fostering research capacity building and research leadership and developing a structured knowledge management plan for sharing materials within and across ASIS&amp;T units.</p><p>As president-elect, Given will spend the upcoming administrative year working with <b>Lynn Silipigni Connaway</b> of OCLC Research who will ascend to the presidency at the upcoming Annual Meeting.</p><p><b>June Abbas</b>, professor in the School of Library and Information Studies (SLIS) at the University of Oklahoma, Norman campus, looks forward to her term as treasurer during which she will work to sustain the sound financial health of ASIS&amp;T. The step into the treasurer's seat comes immediately upon completion of a term as director-at-large.</p><p>As a member of the Board of Directors, <b>Heather O'Brien</b>, assistant professor at the School of Library, Archival and Information Studies at the University of British Columbia, says she will support the ASIS&amp;T strategic plan and its mission to provide focus, opportunity and support to information professionals and organizations around the world. And <b>Dania Bilal</b>, professor and interim director at the School of Information Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, wants to enhance the association's global perspective through establishing partnerships with professional associations in the Middle East, especially in countries without an ASIS&amp;T presence.</p><p>As the new directors join the ASIS&amp;T Board of Directors, the following people will transition off as their terms are complete: past president <b>Sandra Hirsh</b>, San Jose State University; treasurer <b>Vicki L. Gregory</b>, University of South Florida; director <b>Lauren D. Harrison</b>, Roche TCRC, Inc. As noted above, <b>June Abbas</b> is completing her term as director and taking her seat as newly elected treasurer.</p><p>The long-awaited 2016 ASIS&amp;T Annual Meeting, the first to be held outside of North America, gets underway in just a few short weeks (depending, of course, on when you are reading this article). From October 14–18, Copenhagen, Denmark, becomes home base for the premier, peer-reviewed international conference of information scientists, practitioners and academics.</p><p><b>Creating Knowledge, Enhancing Lives Through Information and Technology</b> is the theme for this year's gathering of the best and the brightest in the fields of information science and technology. Two plenary speakers will address the theme from different perspectives but with similar enthusiasm for the invaluable contributions our field is making to the world at-large.</p><p>Greg Welch, Florida Hospital Endowed Chair in Healthcare Simulation at the University of Central Florida (UCF), holds appointments in the College of Nursing, the computer science department and the Institute for Simulation and Training. He is also co-director of both the UCF Synthetic Reality Laboratory and the interactive systems and user experience research cluster at UCF. He will speak to the ASIS&amp;T gathering on <i>Bridging the Telepresence Valley</i>.</p><p>Markus Bundschus, head of scientific and business information systems at Roche Diagnostics, brings to the ASIS&amp;T Annual Meeting the insights of an insider in the field of biotechnology. Markus works on building bridges between industry and research and has been applying information and technology to create knowledge that contributes to the development of diagnostic tools.</p><p>In addition to these two plenary sessions, attendees will choose from among dozens of stimulating panel and paper sessions presenting cutting-edge research, applications, approaches and agendas that will continue to drive the field in the years ahead.</p><p>If you haven't yet secured your travel arrangements, do so now so you won't miss out on this historic ASIS&amp;T Annual Meeting.</p><p>Peter Suber and other chroniclers of the open-access movement have noted that the open, online dissemination of scholarly and research material is reliant upon digital reproduction. Indeed, prior to our present age, Suber notes that all forms of non-rivalrous objects, such as knowledge, were tied to rivalrous modes of communication, such as paper. But is the digital age so different from the age of mechanical reproduction identified by Walter Benjamin early in the 20<sup>th</sup> century? Why should new technological mutations drive the ways in which humanities scholars disseminate their work? And is there a danger in letting technological fetishism act as determiners of humanities scholarship?</p><p>In this upcoming SIG/AH webinar, professor Martin Paul Eve will address these matters, which are formative elements of the terrain on which scholarship in the 21<sup>st</sup> century will emerge. <i>Technology and Publishing: The Work of Scholarship in the Age of its Digital Reproducibility</i>, featuring Martin Paul Eve from the Open Library of Humanities/Birkbeck, University of London, will be September 21, 2016, at 11:00 a.m.-12:15pm EDT. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

asist董事会新领导人年度选举的夏季投票已经结束。获奖者将在即将到来的丹麦哥本哈根年度会议结束时就座,他们是当选总统丽莎·吉文;六月阿巴斯,司库;希瑟·奥布莱恩和达尼娅·比拉尔担任董事。澳大利亚查尔斯特大学(Charles Sturt University)专业实践、学习和教育研究所(research Institute for Professional Practice, Learning and Education)的信息研究教授、研究员丽莎·吉文(Lisa Given)的总统竞选基于她对深化和加强与跨境会员的接触、扩大跨学科和实践中的会员基础的兴趣。促进研究能力建设和研究领导,并制定结构化的知识管理计划,以便在asist单位内部和之间共享材料。作为当选总统,吉文将在即将到来的行政年度与OCLC研究部的Lynn Silipigni Connaway一起工作,后者将在即将到来的年会上升任主席。俄克拉何马大学诺曼校区图书馆与信息研究学院(SLIS)教授June Abbas期待着她作为财务主管的任期,在此期间,她将致力于维持asist良好的财务健康。在完成董事任期后,立即进入财务主管的职位。作为董事会成员,不列颠哥伦比亚大学图书馆、档案和信息研究学院助理教授希瑟·奥布莱恩(Heather O'Brien)表示,她将支持asist的战略计划及其为世界各地的信息专业人士和组织提供关注、机会和支持的使命。田纳西大学诺克斯维尔分校信息科学学院教授兼临时主任达尼娅·比拉尔(Dania Bilal)希望通过与中东地区的专业协会建立伙伴关系,特别是在没有asist存在的国家,加强该协会的全球视野。随着新董事加入asist董事会,以下人员将在他们的任期结束后过渡:圣何塞州立大学前校长桑德拉·赫什;南佛罗里达大学财务主管Vicki L. Gregory;董事Lauren D. Harrison, Roche TCRC, Inc。如上所述,June Abbas即将完成她的董事任期,并担任新当选的财务主管。期待已久的2016年asist年会将在短短几周内举行,这是第一次在北美以外举行的年会(当然,这取决于您何时阅读本文)。从10月14日至18日,丹麦的哥本哈根将成为由信息科学家、从业者和学者组成的顶级、同行评议的国际会议的大本营。“创造知识,通过信息技术改善生活”是今年信息科学与技术领域最优秀和最聪明的人士聚会的主题。两位全体会议发言人将从不同的角度讨论这一主题,但对我们的领域正在对整个世界作出的宝贵贡献抱有同样的热情。格雷格·韦尔奇,中佛罗里达大学(UCF)佛罗里达医院医疗保健模拟教授,在护理学院、计算机科学系和模拟与培训研究所任职。他也是UCF合成现实实验室和UCF交互系统和用户体验研究集群的联合主任。他将在asist关于弥合网真山谷的会议上发表讲话。罗氏诊断公司科学和商业信息系统主管Markus Bundschus为asist年会上带来了生物技术领域内部人士的见解。Markus致力于在工业和研究之间建立桥梁,并一直应用信息和技术来创造有助于诊断工具开发的知识。除了这两个全体会议之外,与会者还将从数十个令人兴奋的小组和论文会议中进行选择,介绍将在未来几年继续推动该领域发展的前沿研究、应用、方法和议程。如果你还没有确定你的旅行安排,现在就去做,这样你就不会错过这个历史性的asist年会。Peter Suber和其他开放获取运动的编年史家注意到,学术和研究材料的开放、在线传播依赖于数字复制。事实上,在我们现在这个时代之前,苏伯指出,所有形式的非竞争性对象,如知识,都与竞争性的通信模式(如纸张)联系在一起。 但是,数字时代与沃尔特·本雅明(Walter Benjamin)在20世纪初所认定的机械复制时代有如此大的不同吗?为什么新的技术突变会影响人文学者传播其研究成果的方式?让技术拜物教成为人文学术的决定因素是否有危险?在即将到来的SIG/AH网络研讨会上,Martin Paul Eve教授将讨论这些问题,这些问题是21世纪学术将出现的地形的形成要素。技术与出版:在其数字再现时代的学术工作,特色马丁·保罗·伊夫从人文/伯克贝克,伦敦大学的开放图书馆,将于2016年9月21日上午11:00 -下午12:15美国东部时间。访问详情可在ASIST网络研讨会网站www.asist.org/events/webinars/Martin上获得他是三本书的作者:品钦与哲学:维特根斯坦,福柯和阿多诺(Palgrave, 2014);《开放获取与人文:背景、争议和未来》(剑桥大学出版社,2014);和密码:文化史(布卢姆斯伯里出版社,2016年即将出版)以及许多期刊文章。作为学术材料开放获取的强烈倡导者,马丁向英国下议院特别委员会调查开放获取提供了证据;曾在Jisc oopen - uk顾问委员会、Jisc国家专著战略小组和Jisc学术交流顾问委员会任职;HEFCE开放获取专著专家参考小组成员;他是新加坡国立大学学术内容和传播战略小组的成员。Martin也是一名合格的计算机程序员(c#和。net框架的微软专业人员),是数字出版工具meTypeset和CaSSius的作者。戴安·凯利,长期asist成员和国际知名的信息科学学者,是田纳西大学信息科学学院(SIS)的新主任。她将于8月8日开始。最近,黛安在北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校担任信息与图书馆科学学院的教授。主要研究和教学方向为交互式信息搜索与检索、信息搜索行为与研究方法。通信与信息学院院长Mike Wirth说:“Diane Kelly是信息检索系统用户评估方面的世界领先专家之一,是一位杰出的学者/教师,我们很高兴她能加入我们,成为我们信息科学学院的新主任。”“她在世界范围内的联系以及对信息科学所涵盖的不断发展和扩展的领域的广泛掌握,将为SIS提供所需的创新领导力,以扩大其跨学科和跨学科的教学和研究使命,并面对与世界上快节奏和快速增长的知识经济相关的挑战和机遇。”在她众多的荣誉和奖项中,Diane在2014年被ASIS&T授予了著名的研究奖。她还获得了2009年ASIS&T/汤森路透杰出信息科学教师奖。博士生在写作阶段或准备答辩他们的论文,敦促展示他们的研究更广泛的观众在新的asist博士生展示。符合条件的学生是那些已经完成课程作业,资格考试(或同等学历)并为他们的提案辩护或正在分析/写作或准备为他们的论文辩护的博士生。提交的是类似于电梯演讲的短视频,其中提出了与广泛定义的信息领域相关的论文研究。最好的20个作品的制作人将获得一年免费的ASIS&T会员资格或续签。所有经过审查的提交将在asist网站上展示。视频提交截止日期已延长至2016年9月1日。该倡议由asist会员委员会、asist教育和专业发展委员会以及asist外展和参与工作组共同发起。欲了解更多信息或有任何问题,请联系Iris Xie: hiris&lt;at&gt;uwm.edu
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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ASIS&T Election of Officers and Directors: And the Winners Are….

Summer balloting is complete for the annual process of selecting new leaders for the ASIS&T Board of Directors. And the winners, who will take their seats at the conclusion of the upcoming Annual Meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, are Lisa Given, president-elect; June Abbas, treasurer; and as directors-at-large, Heather O'Brien and Dania Bilal.

Lisa Given, professor of information studies and a research fellow of the Research Institute for Professional Practice, Learning and Education at Charles Sturt University in Australia, based her presidential campaign on her interest in deepening and strengthen engagement with members across borders, broadening the membership base across disciplines and in practice, fostering research capacity building and research leadership and developing a structured knowledge management plan for sharing materials within and across ASIS&T units.

As president-elect, Given will spend the upcoming administrative year working with Lynn Silipigni Connaway of OCLC Research who will ascend to the presidency at the upcoming Annual Meeting.

June Abbas, professor in the School of Library and Information Studies (SLIS) at the University of Oklahoma, Norman campus, looks forward to her term as treasurer during which she will work to sustain the sound financial health of ASIS&T. The step into the treasurer's seat comes immediately upon completion of a term as director-at-large.

As a member of the Board of Directors, Heather O'Brien, assistant professor at the School of Library, Archival and Information Studies at the University of British Columbia, says she will support the ASIS&T strategic plan and its mission to provide focus, opportunity and support to information professionals and organizations around the world. And Dania Bilal, professor and interim director at the School of Information Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, wants to enhance the association's global perspective through establishing partnerships with professional associations in the Middle East, especially in countries without an ASIS&T presence.

As the new directors join the ASIS&T Board of Directors, the following people will transition off as their terms are complete: past president Sandra Hirsh, San Jose State University; treasurer Vicki L. Gregory, University of South Florida; director Lauren D. Harrison, Roche TCRC, Inc. As noted above, June Abbas is completing her term as director and taking her seat as newly elected treasurer.

The long-awaited 2016 ASIS&T Annual Meeting, the first to be held outside of North America, gets underway in just a few short weeks (depending, of course, on when you are reading this article). From October 14–18, Copenhagen, Denmark, becomes home base for the premier, peer-reviewed international conference of information scientists, practitioners and academics.

Creating Knowledge, Enhancing Lives Through Information and Technology is the theme for this year's gathering of the best and the brightest in the fields of information science and technology. Two plenary speakers will address the theme from different perspectives but with similar enthusiasm for the invaluable contributions our field is making to the world at-large.

Greg Welch, Florida Hospital Endowed Chair in Healthcare Simulation at the University of Central Florida (UCF), holds appointments in the College of Nursing, the computer science department and the Institute for Simulation and Training. He is also co-director of both the UCF Synthetic Reality Laboratory and the interactive systems and user experience research cluster at UCF. He will speak to the ASIS&T gathering on Bridging the Telepresence Valley.

Markus Bundschus, head of scientific and business information systems at Roche Diagnostics, brings to the ASIS&T Annual Meeting the insights of an insider in the field of biotechnology. Markus works on building bridges between industry and research and has been applying information and technology to create knowledge that contributes to the development of diagnostic tools.

In addition to these two plenary sessions, attendees will choose from among dozens of stimulating panel and paper sessions presenting cutting-edge research, applications, approaches and agendas that will continue to drive the field in the years ahead.

If you haven't yet secured your travel arrangements, do so now so you won't miss out on this historic ASIS&T Annual Meeting.

Peter Suber and other chroniclers of the open-access movement have noted that the open, online dissemination of scholarly and research material is reliant upon digital reproduction. Indeed, prior to our present age, Suber notes that all forms of non-rivalrous objects, such as knowledge, were tied to rivalrous modes of communication, such as paper. But is the digital age so different from the age of mechanical reproduction identified by Walter Benjamin early in the 20th century? Why should new technological mutations drive the ways in which humanities scholars disseminate their work? And is there a danger in letting technological fetishism act as determiners of humanities scholarship?

In this upcoming SIG/AH webinar, professor Martin Paul Eve will address these matters, which are formative elements of the terrain on which scholarship in the 21st century will emerge. Technology and Publishing: The Work of Scholarship in the Age of its Digital Reproducibility, featuring Martin Paul Eve from the Open Library of Humanities/Birkbeck, University of London, will be September 21, 2016, at 11:00 a.m.-12:15pm EDT. Access details will be available on the ASIST webinars site at www.asist.org/events/webinars/

Martin is the author of three books: Pynchon and Philosophy: Wittgenstein, Foucault and Adorno (Palgrave, 2014); Open Access and the Humanities: Contexts, Controversies and the Future (Cambridge University Press, 2014); and Password: A Cultural History (Bloomsbury, forthcoming 2016) and many journal articles. A strong advocate for open access to scholarly material, Martin has given evidence to the UK House of Commons Select Committee Inquiry into Open Access; served on the Jisc OAPEN-UK Advisory Board, the Jisc National Monograph Strategy Group and the Jisc Scholarly Communications Advisory Board; been a member of the HEFCE Open Access Monographs Expert Reference Group; and is a member of the SCONUL Strategy Group on Academic Content and Communications. Martin is also a qualified computer programmer (Microsoft Professional in C# and the .NET Framework) and is the author of the digital publishing tools meTypeset and CaSSius.

Diane Kelly, longtime ASIS&T member and an internationally known information sciences scholar, is the new director of the University of Tennessee School of Information Sciences (SIS). She begins on August 8. Most recently, Diane was at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she was a professor in the School of Information and Library Science. Her research and teaching interests focus on interactive information search and retrieval, information search behavior and research methods.

“Diane Kelly, one of the world's leading experts with respect to user evaluation of information retrieval systems, is an outstanding scholar/teacher, and we are excited to have her join us as the new director of our School of Information Sciences,” said Mike Wirth, dean of the College of Communication and Information. “Her world-wide connections and extensive grasp of the evolving and expanding fields encompassed by information sciences will provide SIS with the innovative leadership required to expand its interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary teaching and research mission and to confront the challenges and opportunities associated with the world's high-paced and fast growing knowledge economy.”

Among her many honors and awards, Diane was recognized by ASIS&T in 2014 with the prestigious Research Award. She also received the 2009 ASIS&T/Thomson Reuters Outstanding Information Science Teacher Award.

Doctoral students in the writing stage or preparing for the defense of their dissertations are urged to showcase their research to a much wider audience in the new ASIS&T Doctoral Student Showcase. Eligible students are those doctoral students who have completed their coursework, qualifying examinations (or equivalent) and defended their proposals or are in the process of analyzing/writing or ready to defend their dissertations. Submissions are short videos similar to elevator speeches in which the dissertation research, related to the broadly defined information field, is presented.

The producers of the best 20 submissions will win free one-year ASIS&T memberships or renewals. All vetted submissions will be featured on the ASIS&T website.

The deadline for video submission has been extended to September 1, 2016.

This initiative is co-sponsored by the ASIS&T Membership Committee, ASIS&T Education and Professional Advancement Committee and the ASIS&T Outreach and Engagement Task Force.

For more information or if you have any questions, please contact Iris Xie at hiris<at>uwm.edu

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